mil Text Oi Hnlehins' Speech'%e VoUju Ifk/ioori (See page three)Vol. 4l.No. 44 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. JANUARY 6. 1*942 Price Three CentsIowa Wins \Move InCage Tilt Coast53-39 ! GuardsBy PHILIP RIEFFSpurred and goaded into a secondhalf scoring splurge by accurate Ma¬roon long shots, the towering Hawk-eyes from Iowa turned on the powerin the second half and finished with arespectable 53-39 victory over the Ma¬roons here, last night. The Chicagoquintet, paced by Captain Jack Fons’10 points, proved a reluctant victimthroughout the first half and trailedby a mere six points, 30-24.Milt Kuhl, the 6’6” Hawkeye juniorpivot man, garnered top scoring hon¬ors for the evening, with 17 talliescredited to him on the Iowa ledger.Hen Trickey, the Neanderthal-likeIowa forward, opened the fatal sec¬ond half with a couple of charitypoints; compliments of Chicago’s Jim('rosbie. Bernie Heinen, the sophomoreMaroon center, countered with a freethrow but Tom Chapman scored threetimes for the Hawkeyes to pull themahead, 37-25.Trickey and Chapman continued todrive through the Maroon defense andpushed the tally-sheet up to 46-33,when Ed Nelson, the Chicago longshot speciali.st, countered with one ofhis two successful attempts. MiltKuhl, and his alternate, Bruce Camp-Mi made one basket apiece as theyleft and entered the tilt, putting RollieWilliams win-hungry cagers into asafe 50-33 lead.Oakley, the second Maroon sopho¬more to earn a starting assignment,combined with Wagenberg to movethe Maroon total to 36 points, and aNelson-Heinen drive climaxed the last-minute Maroon surge with anotherthree-point flurry.(Continued on page five) Five hundred Coast Guard recruitsare moving in on the University ofChicago this week. About 125 of themare here already, and the rest of themwill Im? here by the end of the week.Of the five hundred recruits, threehundred will be housed in the men’sCourts, mo.st of these in entries 4 and5, the rest in the best-ventilated partof the ba.sement. Forty of the youngmen will live at International House,twenty of them in the erstwhileMen’s Lounge, which is being convert-i ed into a dormtiory for them andj twenty on the second floor in a seclud-! ed corner. The remainder of the re-i cruits will move into a nearby hotel,j although it has not yet been <lecidedI which hotel.j All five hundred of the recruitsI will take their meals in the Burtonj and Judson dining rooms. No clas.s-rooms have been provided for the menby the University’s contract with theGovernment which only concerns foodand lodging, and the recruits’ chiefactivity will consist of drilling inGreenwood Field. The men will betaken care of here until they receiveregular assignments in the CoastGuard.The government is paying the Uni¬versity to provide these Coast Guardmen with meals and housing, but theywill have little or no contact with thestudent body. It is not known as yethow long these recruits will be hereor if there will be more of them later.Pacific Blackout:Ex-Maroon Editor TellsOf Coast War SceneBy DAVE MARTIN“Blackout Flashlights” the sign said,and 1 felt silly buying one, but I did,a little pencil affair with the lenspainted blue except for a bulls-eye ofclear glass. The San Francisco scarewas a hoax or something I kept think¬ing. Who would believe it? But twoextra batteries for the flashlight werea wise buy.“By order of the Fourth Intercep¬tor Command a complete light black¬out is ordered immediately.” Wasthis Los Angeles or London? Overand over the announcers droned thismes.sage. ‘‘From Bakersfield on theNorth to San Diego, from the coastto Las Vegas, Nevada.” All of South¬ern California going black! We wentout on the balcony to watch the lightsgo. Far downtown we could trace theprogression of janitors floor by flooras they turned out lights in a Jargeoffice building. PLOP! and the streetlights went out. An air raid warden’scar hurried up and down the streets,blue headlights dimly visible. Andthen the radios went off the air.Blackout in the city is not like adark night in the country. Here theniemory of light remains, here it hasbeen natural to have brightness, andthe dark is ominous, unnatural. Inthe dark street there are no soundsof the increasing grinding whine ofautomobiles. In the dim starlight,houses, houses in which you knowthere are people, stand deserted andcluiet. No dog barks, no far off hornsounds, no half-heard music helps fillthe empty night. The city does not David Martinseem to sleep, it seems dead, a spec-tred shell, and you there in the middleof the street an incongrous mockei'y.You, in a lighted city, look about youand you will notice that you feelthat the city belongs to you, buta city dark and voiceless belongs tono one; it becomes a new kind ofjungle.No lights create a traffic problem,but you learn a lot of things. Thefirst thing you learn is that you needless light than you think. If you driveslowly you can see the car aheadfaintly but sufficiently. Coming to acorner the drivers, once arrogant asonly people in automobiles can be,timidly flash lights. Intersectionslook like a convention of fireflies. You(Continued on page six) Military CourseWill Train 1,000Men For ServiceAlpha Phi OmegaBegins DefenseStamp DriveLocal chapter of the Alpha PhiOmega, national service fraternity,today begins a defense stamp drivein an effort to unite University stu¬dents in support of the nation’s wareffort. A stamp booth will be main¬tained in the Bursar’s office from 10-5daily throughout the week.‘‘Our goal,” stated Don Panarese,Alpha Phi president, ‘‘is to encourage100 percent participation. We hopeto get every student on the campusto start his own book of defensestamps.‘‘Women’s Federation, headed byShirley Latham, is cooperating withus by furnishing women to help atthe booth. We also have Bursar Cot¬ton behind us in this enterprise, andZens Smith, our sponsor.”Offer CourseIn NewspaperChinese: Creel Slate Extra CourseTo Handle InfluxRegistration DropsFall quarter registration re¬ceived by 5 yesterday totalled4300, Registrar E. C. Miller an¬nounced last night. Figures at acorresponding stage a year agoshowed 4893 registered, or a dropof 12 percent.The figures released include bothadvance registrations and thosereceived yesterday. Registrationwill continue during the week,after which a $5 late fee ischarged.Four FacultyMembers MoveTo New PostsNewspaper Chinese has been differ¬entiated from Literary Chinese, andso, to fulfill a need for an increasedunderstanding of Chinese as presentedin Chinese newspapers, the staff ofthe Oriental Institute will present acourse in this new field. Such a coursewill also serve as a testing groundfor materials to be presented in a re¬cently planned text book on newspa¬per Chinese.After the Pearl Harbor incident,several advanced Chinese studentsconferred with Herlee Creel, assistantprofessor of the Oriental Institute,and discussed plans for some workthat would prove useful in the crisis.The discussion resulted in the decisionto prepare a text which would lead togeneral understanding of newspaperChinese.No knowledge of Chinese is re¬quired for admittance to the coursewhich will begin this afternoon at3:30 in the Oriental Institute. How¬ever, all registrants must be approvedby Mr. Creel before they can be ad¬mitted to tlje class which will meetfour days a week. Mr. Creel, who willsupervise the course, warns that stu¬dents should not expect to emergefrom it with a full knowledge of adifficult and intricate study.Preparation for three texts in Lit¬erary Chinese lasted through sixyears of research and testing, but itis hoped that this newest work willnot require such extensive labor. Fouradvanced students, three faculty mem(Continued on page five)Candle Lighting CeremonyThe annual traditional EpiphanyCandle-Lighting service will beheld in the Chapel tonight at 7:30.It is a ceremonial and musical ser¬vice given by the University Choirand acolytes from the Church ofthe Redeemer. 'The ceremony cele¬brates the visit of the three Magiand the consequent spreading ofthe Light into the world.In the ceremony one large can¬dle is first illuminated, then thethree candles representing theThree Kings. The more than 200candles on the altar are lit, andthose of twelve men representingthe twelve disciples. Finally thecandles of the entire choir arelighted. . . . Neil H. JacobyAppointment of four University ofChicago faculty members to newposts in the University was announcedrecently. Miss Helen R. Wright, pro¬fessor of social service administration,will succeed Miss Edith Abbott, notedpioneer in the field, as dean of theSchool of Social Service Administra¬tion. Miss Abbott, who has been deansince the School was established in1920 reaches retirement age in 1942,and Miss Wright’s appointment be¬comes effective in the autumn of thatyear.President Hutchins announced thatClarence A. Faust, professor of Eng¬lish and acting dean of the Collegesince August, has been appointeddean.Mr. Carleton B. Joeckel, will suc¬ceed Dr. Louis Round Wilson, as deanof the Graduate Library School. Dr.Wilson, dean since the Graduate Li¬brary School was established in 1932,reaches the retirement age in 1942.Dr. Joeckel, an authority on libraryadministration, will assume the dutiesof dean in the fall of 1942.Dr. Neil H. Jacoby, associate pro¬fessor of finance in the School of Busi¬ness, has been appointed Secretaryof the University. In his new positionDr. Jacoby’s most important functionwill be direction of the developmentwork of the University. Dr. Jacobywill assume his new post at the con¬clusion of a national defense researchproject in New York City, in connec¬tion with which he is on leave of ab¬sence from the University. 1,000 men will receive militarytraining this quarter through theUniversity’s Institute of MilitaryStudies which is continuing on alarger scale the Basic Military Train¬ing Course it has given since theAutumn of 1940. Already the enroll¬ment of 500 for the course beginningWednesday, January 14 is filled andanother section which will meet onFriday evenings beginning January16 has just been announced. Regis¬tration for this is still open.The 500 registered in the Wednes¬day course are mainly students andUniversity personnel and the Fridaycourse is rapidly being filled by menin the City not connected with theUniversity although students maystill register for this section.Simultaneous with this announce¬ment came the news that several spe¬cialized courses are being run by theInstitute in conjunction with the basiccourse. These include a course in ad¬vanced rifle marksmanship, mathe¬matics of artillery and navigation,chemical laboratory techniques, physi¬cal conditioning, and a course in elec¬tricity and communications. The pre¬requisite for all these courses will bethe basic training. However, one ofthese specialized courses and the basiccourse may be taken concurrently.Meanwhile with ‘‘No day off ’tillArmistice Day” as their slogan,Arthur L. H. Rubin, Executive Officerof the Institute, and his staff areworking days and nights to insure thebest possible instruction for the greatinflux of new trainees coming intocourse 009.(Continued on page five) iTrain Navy MenIn MeteorologyCarl-Gustaf Rossby, Director of theInstitute of Meteorology, announcedyesterday that beginning March 1 theInstitute will undertake to traintwelve college graduates in basicmeteorology for the Navy.The workings of the process arethat the University will recommendtwelve students to the Navy, the Navywill commission them ensigns in theNaval Reserve with a $183 salaryplus allowances for room and board,and the university then trains themin a nine month’s course.The conditions for application arethat candidates must possess a bache¬lor’s degree in science or engineering,be between the ages of 20 and 27, anAmerican citizen in good physicalcondition, and familiar with integraland differential calculus.In explaining the Navy’s desire formeteorologists, Rossby said that thestudy was essential to naval aviationand navigation of surface craft. Inbbmbing, for instance visibility de¬pends on atmospheric conditions:clear sky, overcast sky, and the like.The Institute, however, will not at¬tempt to make its course coincide withspecific Navy problems but give train¬ing in fundamental meteorology.Professor Rossby emphasized theopportunities contained in the twelvecommissions, terming them ‘‘realplumbs for someone.”Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 6. 1942By CHLOE ROTHWHEE!!!The Bazaar can finally take itsplace in the Hall of Fame alongsideWalter Winchell. At long last one of' its predictions came tru^. The pre¬mature announcement of Jack Dry-den’s pinning of Barbara Price wasfulfilled during vacation.Santa Claus brought many engage¬ment rings and pins to the girlies ofthe campus. Donna Culliton is en¬gaged to Louie Miller. Mimi Evans(of Look Magazine fame) is betroth¬ed to Hugh Rendleman. Joan Lydingto Jim Bell. Sue Steel to ButchArnold.Martin's^The Martin family had an eventfulChristmas. You remember Dave, whowas chairman of the Maroon Boardof Control some three years ago. Hejust married Peg Something-or-other,now Peg Martin. And Dave’s littlesister Yvonne got herself a ringCharlotte Ford hooked an unidentifiedman.Les Dean made an Alpha Delt, ifpins mean anything, out of NancyMiller... .Bud (Friend of the People)Aronson had his girl visiting himBarbara Pricefrom Shreveport, you all. Most of uswere surprised to learn that she hadbeen wearing his pin on her buz forquite some time, you all.Sailing, SailingOur ex-colleague Dick (Sad Bass)Philbrick has sent word in that he isa Chief Petty Officer irj the UnitedStates Navy, and sailing for parts un¬known.Sybil (just call me Dribble) Ferri-ter took Jay Mullen’s Chi Psi pin....excuse me Chi Psi Badge. It’s bigenough to be a medal.... All God’schillun got pins. At this point it mightbe more interesting to write aboutpeople who aren’t pinned. 'There areso many who are, tho, like ClarissaRahill and Bob Steirer.Good NumberLots of people have left school, butlots of nice ones have just entered.For instance, there is Bf.bby Shinn,who is living in Kelly. She came fromdear old Northwestern where she wasa Pi Phi.Vivien Green, now Mrs. Leo Glass,is back from Hawaii with her Navalhusband. She came over on a Navytransport right after the bombing.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course-starting January 1. April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.DmPH.B.Reptlar Courses for Beginner*, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Av«.,Chicago, Rando/ph 4347 s>e—^Editorial «MaroonAgrees WithHutchins^ButWantsBroadEducationalReformsWe begin a new year in general agreement with our two pres¬idents, the President of the United States and the president ofthe University of Chicago.We supported Mr. Roosevelt’s foreign policy long before PearlHarbor. We sadly opposed Mr. Hutchins non-interventionist viewsbefore war was declared. After his speech to the student body, w'eare only too glad to again see eye to eye with Hutchins and forgethis earlier mistakes.Hutchins* SpeechWe thought Mr. Hutchins* speech was a thorough and soundevaluation of the problems that students, faculty members, anduniversity administrators will face during these war years. Inspite of our feeling that we ought to do our part to win the waras soon as possible, we can appreciate the value of staying inschool until we are called. We realize that in all out war thesoldiers are only one part of the victory machine we are building.Hutchins was right ivhen he said that the war may be “ivon in thelaboratories”.We are somewhat less pessimistic than Hutchins about thefuture of education. We do not want to underestimate the dangersto universities when students and faculty members are calledaway to serve the nation. We see the perhaps even greater dangerwhen the curriculum has to be adjusted to prepare students forthe practical needs of the moment rather than to teach the broaderand more general principles that will be of lasting value after thew’ar is over.Educational Reforms Tfie OcuLci Tfh/iootiFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished mornings except Saturday, Sunday, andMonday during the Autumn, Winter, andSpring quarters by The Daily Maroon Com¬pany, 5831 University Avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers.The Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62ndstreet. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re¬sponsibility for any statements appearing in'llie Daily Maroon, or for any contract enteredinto by 'Fhe Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves therights of publication of any material appear¬ing in this paper. Subscription rates: $2.75 ayear, $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18,1908. at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPissociolGd Cblle6icile FVessDiitributor ofGDlle6iciie DibesI Bondf ield ToSpeak To SSAGreat Britain’s former Minister ofLabor, the Rt. Honorable MargnretBondfield is to give three special loctures this week on “Great Britain andthe War.”This afternoon the first of thesethree lectures, “Women in Industrythe British War Experiment” will begiven at 4:30 in the South Room ofthe Law Building. The second lecturewill be at 4:30 on Wednesday in theNorth room of the Law Building, on“Post War Planning, I.” The lastlecture, “Post War Planning, H” winbe held Friday at 3:30 in the Southroom of the Law Building. Miss Bond-field, the guest of Dean Edith Abbott,is lecturing here under the sponsor¬ship of the School of Social ServiceAdministration.Miss Bondfield was the first womancabinet member in a British govern¬ment when she was Minister of Labor,under Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, from 1929 to 1931. She wasalso the first woman member of theParliamentary Committee of theTrades Union Congress, the firstwoman Privy Councillor, Justice ofPeace for the County of London since1920, and holds an honorary degreeof Doctor of Law.s from Bristol Uni¬versity.But we think the adjustment to a war situation may helpbring about some of the reforms that American education hasneeded since the beginning of this century. Most educators agreethat the division points between grammar school, high school, col¬lege, and graduation and professional studies are wasteful andillogical.The work of grammar school could be finished in six yearsand high school in another four years. Four years more of workin what would correspond to our Four Year College would givestudents the equivalent of a general education. Then is when weought to get a bachelor's degree. If the bachelor’s degree weregiven at this time we could make a much clearer distinction be¬tween ’’education” as cultural and citizenship training and ’’edu¬cation” as a process of learning how to earn a living.Vested InterestsBut while such reforms have been necessary for a long time,only a major shake-up like a war can wake up the vested interestgroups in education who may often admit the need for reformsbut who are too lazy and too much addicted to a philosophy of“gradual change by doing nothing” to make any concrete progressin changing the dividing places between the different stages ineducation.But the war will make these changes almost inevitable be¬cause :1. In order to enter college before they come of draft agemany students will finish high school in two or threeyears.2. In order to accomplish the objectives of a secondary edu¬cation in four years the last two years of grammar schoolare likely to be practically merged into high school. Thisstep will become necessary when high school studentsbegin trying to finish their work in two or three years.3. So many students who are now in college will leave for thearmy at the end of the first two years that they, theirparents, and the public will demand that they be givensome kind of recognition for their efforts. Such recogni¬tion would be a college degree.A Two Year DegreeThese are the trends that are almost inevitable in education.We think they are desirable trends. The University should marchwith these trends. We should:1. Give a bachelor’s degree at the end of the first two yearsat the university.2. Expand the Four Year College. A great deal of the pub¬licity effort that is noiv being used to attract students intothe two year college should be used in connection with thefour year college.The university should not wait until it is practically forcedto make these changes. It should continue as a leader among uni¬versities and be among the first to adjust to a program that isbest suited for both the needs of peacetime and wartime.J. B.Music Department To PresentInterpretations Of ConcertsThe Music Department is planning to present a weekly article interpretingthe music presented each Tuesday in the noon phonograph concerts given inthe Social Science Assembly Hall. Starting today these articles will show thedevelopment of orchestral music from its rise in popularity in the sixteenthcentury to its heights as centered in Bach and Handel.Sixteenth century works show the growing interest in opera, oratorio,and ballet. The two main features characteristic of early instrumental musicwhich will be highlighted are the use of the “continuous bass” and the growthof the conception of instrumental parts in terms of previously existing vocalpolyphony.Today’s concert will consist of the playing of twelve selections from theinstrumental music of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries from the “An-thologie Sonore” with Kurt Sachs as director. On Wednesday, the Symphony inD Minor of Cesar Frank conducted by Stokowski will be played while Thurs¬day’s concert will feature the Swartmore College Chorus and Orchestra con¬ducted by Alfred Swan playing Theresien Messe of Haydn. Friday’s concertwill consist of two works; first Bach’s Concerto No. 2 in E Major with YehudiMenuhin, and second, Der Schwanendreher by Hindemith and played by thecomposer. BOARD OF CONTROLEdUorUIRICHARD HIMMEL ChairmanJAMES RURTI.EROBERT REYNOLDSBasinesaEDOAR I.. RACHLIN. Busineu ManagerRichard Bolks, Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATES iRobert Lawson. Nancy Lesser. Reata Mueller, !Philip RiefT, Chloe Roth, Stuart Schulberg, |Shirlee Smith. Marshall Pattullo and IElirabeth Jane Waters IBUSINESS ASSOCIATES ^' George Flanagan, Howard Kamin, Richard :Wallens. William Bell, iEllen TuttleNight Editors Baum and RiefTJournalism's Grief LEX 1162 E. 63rdPush Back SeatsLAST TIMES TODAY"DR. JEKYL AND MR. HYDE 'withSPENCER TRACY - INGRID BERGMANLANA TURNERplus"THE FEMININE TOUCH"withDON AMECHE - ROSALIND RUSSELLWad.—Thurs.• WE GO FAST"withLYNN BARI - ALAN CURTISand"MEXICAN'S SPITFIRE BABY"withLUPE VELEZREADSwedenborg"All religion has relation to life, andthe life of religion is to do good."—Swendenborg.i 4 DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM”70c in paperat University and other bookstores.FOUQUETTE’S5650 Ellis AvenueComplete Stock of Student SuppliesUsed & New Textbooks—Bought & SoldRental SetsFine Food & Fountain ServiceCIGARS CIGARETTES TOBACCOYou Are Always WelcomeFREE DELIVERY MIDWAY 0670The Relation Of TheAnd Its Students To The WarNow that we are at war wemust proceed to win the waras quickly and efficiently aspossible. I propose to set forthtoday the methods by whichI think the University and itsstudents can best contributeto the prompt and adequatedefeat of the enemy.On June 28,1940, a year anda half ago, the presidents ofseven middle western univer¬sities met in Chicago. Theyrepresented Illinois, Indiana,Michigan State, Ohio State,Purdue, Wisconsin and Chi¬cago. After indorsing in prin¬ciple the Selective Service Act,then pending in Congress,they made the following com¬ments on the military program of the country.We believe that adequate forces of well-trained mencannot be obtained on a voluntary basis and that preparedness onthe scale now contemplated requires a system of selective com¬pulsory training and service.**2. We favor the registration and classification of all malecitizens between 18 and 65 and urge that this be done withoutdelay.“3. We believe that every man between these ages should betrained for national defense, the training appropriate for eachindividual to be determined by carefi^ly worked out methods ofclassification.Since a system designed to put the right man in the rightplace will break down if volunteering is permitted, we favor theprohibition of volunteering and the recruitment of all services for ■national defense by conscription.“5. Though the Reserve Officers* Training Corps should becontinued as part of the academic program of the colleges anduniversities that have them, ordinary military training should begiven by the Army and Navy in their own establishments. TheStudent Army Training.Corps of the last war should not be re¬vived.**Those were my sentiments then. They are my sentiments now. I be-lieve in universal registration and compulsory selective training and service.I favor the immediate prohibition of volunteering and the indefinite post¬ponement of the Student Army Training Corps.Every Citizen To Post Best FittedWhen we go to war, we should go as a nation. We should be requiredto make the same sacrifices in the common cause. We should not be per¬mitted to let the major burden of the war fall on the rising generation.Every citizen should be put at the post for which he is best fitted. No oneshould be allowed to select for himself that position which is most at¬tractive to him. Hence the demand for universal registration and com¬pulsory service.I should hope that those in charge of our destinies would be able towork out a plan whereby young men who have actually embarked, and suc¬cessfully embarked, on a program of studies would be permitted to completeit. The educational organization of th^ country is such that a student canhardly feel that he has had an education until he has finished his sophomoreyear in college. At that stage he has something which approximates a gen¬eral education. I should hope that young men might not be called for full¬time military service until they had reached this point, which would meanthat they would be allowed to remain in college until they had completedthe work of the sophomore year or reached the age of twenty, whicheverwas earlier. I should hope that students actually and successfully engagedin the study of any professional discipline might be deferred until gradua¬tion. The number of these, men is not large enough to be of any militarysignificance. Their quality is such and the country’s future dependenceupon them will be such, that far more will be lost if their studies are in¬terrupted than will be gained by sending them into the Army now. Such suggestions for thedeferment of students cannotbe put into effect unless part-time military training is re¬quired of all of them whilethey remain in college. Thiswas provided in the last warby the S.A.T.C. The S.A.T.C.gave enough military trainingto destroy the curriculum, butnot enough to produce goodsoldiers. Thus it was bad edu¬cation without being goodmilitary training. The Insti¬tute of Military Studies at theUniversity of Chicago offers afar more hopeful method ofaccomplishing the object,which is to supply militarytraining while the student istrying to get an education.Since the Institute is an extra-curriculum activity, it does notinterfere with the course of study. It could easily be made compulsory.By concentrating on essentials and reducing such trivialities as close-orderdrill to a minimum it is able to give the basic R.O.T.C. course in half thetime or less. The use now being made of the Institute’s materials in otheruniversities shows that its program is adapted to other conditions thanour own. I am proposing to the War Department that the University re¬quire all students of military age to take the work of the Institute andthat the Army regard that work as adequate fulfilment of the militaryduties of students. It is also possible to turn the Institute and similar or¬ganizations at other universities into centers at which men who are notstudents but who are soon to be called for active duty may receive pre¬service military training.The University is now making plans for the enlargement of theprogram of the Institute, so as to supply not merely basic training, butpreparation in seven specialized fields as well. These plans will be in effectwith the opening of the Winter Quarter. I urge every man who is subjectto call to take advantage of the opportunities which the Institute offers.As a retired private I can.testify to the head start which even a little mil¬itary training gives a man when he enters the armed forces.Urges Plan Of Promotion From RanksThe Institute does not lead to a commission, and perhaps it neverwill. I am not sure that it ever should. One of the best ways to build up themorale of a conscript army is to insist that promotions should be madefrom the ranks and that officers’ training camps should be open, not tocollege students without military experience, but to private soldiers andnon-commissioned officers selected because of their military ability ratherthan because of the educational opportunities their parents have been ableto give them. That the Army does not regard the Reserve Officers’ TrainingCorps as a particularly helpful adjiinct of our military establishment issuggested by its persistent refusal to create new units. I would remindyou, too, that mere enrolment in the R.O.T.C. does not guarantee a com¬mission. Though almost all students, where such units are in operation,may enter the elementary work, only the advanced course leads to a com¬mission, and in some institutions the number admitted to the advancedcourse has been only about a fifth of that in the elementary work.The country has adopted a plan of universal, compulsory, selectiveservice. That is, all the country except the Navy has done so. One may hopethat Congress will soon carry the national policy to its logical conclusionby prohibiting volunteering. It ought to be a simple matter under a com¬pulsory system to give the Navy the men it needs when it needs them. Thepresent national policy, reaffirmed by Secretary Stimson only yesterday,must be ineffective as long as it may be destroyed by the back door. Mencannot be told with one breath that they are to wait until the proper au¬thorities put them where they belong and with the next that they shouldjoin the Navy. As the war goes on the social pressure to volunteer will be¬come more and more intense. The plan of universal selective service will bedisrupted unless the privilege of volunteering is abolished.This is one thing we can learn from our enemies. In Mein Kampf Hit¬ler condemns in the strongest terms the volunteering policy of ImperialGermany, which, he says, led to the loss of the fiower of the country atLangemarcq in November, 1914, a loss that proved irreparable, since it de¬prived Germany of the leadership it might otherwise have had.Complete Text Of Address DeliveredBy President Robert M. Hutchins ToThe Student Body At A SpecialAssembly On December 19, 1941DECEMBER 20. 1941The Relation Of The UniversityAnd Its Students To The WarSince the national policy has beendeclared, though it is not yet fully ef¬fective, you may take it that the coun¬try has told you to wait until you arenotified of the necessity of your serv¬ices. The country, if it has not calledyou, is telling you to stay where youare and do your utmost to get an edu¬cation. This applies to all students.Certain additional considerations applyto those in the natural sciences; for theoutcome of the war is likely to dependon the scientific strength of the con¬tending parties. The war may be won inthe laboratories of the United States;and the students in them should stay inthem for that purpose. Meanwhile, theUniversity is expanding its program ofpart-time military training, and willmake it compulsory if the Army re¬quests it to do so. The University willdo everything it can'to help you com¬plete your formal education at an earlierdate than you had planned. It will increase the course offerings in theCollege next summer so that sophomores can do a full quarter’s work atthat time. It is considering plans for admitting entering freshmen in Feb¬ruary and in the summer. Arrangements have been made in the Law Schoolto permit students now enrolled to do a full quarter’s work in thesummer.At the same time the University recognizes that financial pressureon students and their parents is likely to become severe as the war goes on.We are therefore making arrangements to expand greatly the opportuni¬ties for part-time work opened this year on a limited scale at MarshallFi^ld and Co. We are also investigating the possibility of extending thesearrangements to some other corporations in the city. Our ideal is to be ableto say that no student need stay away from the University of Chicagobecause he has not the money to attend it.National Interest Is ParamountYou may feel that in the advice I have given you I have shown agreater interest in preserving the University than in saving the country.You may allege that my real desire is to do business as usual, to maintainenrolment, and to hold the institution together as best I can. I can only saythat I would have given you the same advice twenty years ago, long beforeI had any responsibility for the management of a university. When w'e en¬tered the last w'ar I was 18 years old. There was at the outset no programof conscription. The President called for volunteers. Along with hundredsof thousands of others I volunteered, in the middle of my college course. (The result was that I wasted a year without conferring any benefits upon mycountry. The chaos in the branch of the service in which I enlisted wassuch that the Government simply didn’t know what to do with my class¬mates and me. We were the boys who needed only a box-lunch and a changeof underwear, because we were going to be in France in twenty-four hours.We spent almost an entire academic year preparing to be ambulance driversby digging ditches and doing squads right at Allentown, Pa. It would havebeen far better for the country if we had stayed in college and taken part-time military training until in the progress of an orderly program the Gov¬ernment had put us in the places in which we could be most useful. As itwas, we were on the payroll nine months too long; and it took painful andcostly experience on the Italian front to show which of us were qualifiedfor the duties which first-line service in time of war required.The personnel and classification services of the Government are muchbetter now than they were in the last war. We have not merely conscrip¬tion, but conscription established and working long before our actual en¬trance into the war. The U.niversity, for its part, is prepared to offer farbetter part-time military training than anything that was available in myday. I admit to a certain partiality in favor of the University. I think itimportant, for reasons I shall indicate later, that it survive the war. But Iwould not prefer the interest of the University to the national interest.There is no use trying to save the University if the country cannot besaved. I would advise you to go on with your education and with part-timemilitary training, even if I had nothing to do with the University.The faculty of the University, as well as its students, have felt andwill feel the impact of the war. Even before war was declared the scientificdepartments were devoting about 40 per cent of their time and effort toresearch projects conducted at the request of and under contract with theGovernment. In addition the scientific departments and the School of Busi¬ ness were carrying on, at the requestof and under contract with the Govern¬ment, training programs for men goinginto special aspects of defense work. Inthe last two weeks the demands uponthe University have greatly increased.We now have twelve governmentaltraining programs and twenty-eightgovernmental research projects. Sincewe are in daily negotiations with Wash¬ington in regard to more training pro¬grams and more research projects, wemay soon be devoting almost the wholeof our attention in scientific fields to theimmediate task before us all, the taskof winning the war.This task has called many mem¬bers of the faculty away from the cam¬pus. Already sixteen of them are onleave in the Army and Navy. Fourteenof them are on leave in Washington.On Monday afternoon alone the Gov¬ernment requested leave of absence for five members of the social sciencefaculty. This process will continue. All we can do is to place extra burdenson the members of the faculty who remain, in order to provide adequateinstruction for the students. We must close up the ranks and go forward,doing the best we can do maintain the excellence of the University, and atthe same time to give every possible as^stance to the national war effort.The members of the faculty face the same question as the students.Shall they volunteer or shall they wait to be called? My answer is the same.They should wait to be called. The Government has a fairly complete knowl¬edge of the capacities of the individual members of this faculty. The Gov¬ernment knows that any member of the staff will gladly undertake anyduties which he is qualified to perform. It is hardly in the national interestfor men long and carefully trained in special fields to be wasted on duties'for which they have no peculiar qualifications. They should wait until theirpeculiar qualifications are wanted. If the situation should become so des¬perate that sheer manpower, without regard to peculiar qualifications, isthe prime necessity of the hour, then we must all be called, and we shallall go. Our duty now is to try to keep the torch of knowledge burning andto await the Government’s call for any si^ecial talents that we have.Education Faces SacrificeI concede that here my professional bias may be misleading meagain. I believe that education and intellectual investigation are the mostimportant things in the world. I would even be willing to argue that theyare almost as important as mere survival. A life not worth living is notworth having. Education shows us the life worth living. It helps us to leadthat life. Intellectual investigation gives us the power to attain the ends weset before us. This is, true even in war, for,»as I have said, scientific in¬vestigation will give us the power to win this war. If our institutions haveto be sacrificed to win the war, then I am in favor of sacrificing them. Butif some can be saved, then I should hope that the educational system mightbe one of them, for through the educational system all the rest might beborn again. In time of war we have not merely the problem of scientificstrength; we have also the problem of morale. This is a problem of seeingclearly and believing deeply in the ends we have in view. It is an educa¬tional problem. At the end of the war we shall have the problem of thepeace. We cannot refuse to think about that and do nothing but fight furi¬ously up to the time of the armistice, expecting to arrive at just and durableconclusions in a few months of conferences. We must begin to think aboutthe peace now, and in thinking about peace and in thinking how to get thepeoples of the world to accept a just <^ne the educational system can play auseful role. We then have the problem of the terrific readjustment that weand all other nations will have to make when peace has come. This will callfor all the intelligence and all the character we-can muster. From the uni¬versities should come the men and women who can make a decisive con¬tribution to the solution of this problem, the most difficult, perhaps, theworld has ever had to face. The responsibilities of the universities, and ofeducated men and women, extend far beyond the immediate crisis to thosedark and unknown horizons which conceal the shape of things to come.This issue of the Daily Maroon, the Official Student Newspaper, is a supplement to the% t^ regular editions. It is edited, however, by the regular student staff.)•THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 6. 1942 Page FiveHawkeyes Triumph, 53-39Tons Leads TeamWith Ten Points(Continued from page one) Milt KuhlRudy Soderquist, the Hawk’s co¬captain, hooked for two, and Vinceliarsha, one of the Iowa shock troopswrote finis to the second Maroon Wes¬tern Conference defeat with a freethrow to make the final read 53-39.The comparatively small Marooncontingent did most of their basket¬ball playing in the opening period,with Fons and the high-scoring VicSiegal trading successful right andleft hand throws. Siegal, who account¬ed for 125 Iowa points last season,waited only two seconds to score theinaugural basket, and Fons came backwith a free throw.Chuck Wagenberg, the veteran Chi¬cago guard, exchanged courtesies withMilt Kuhl, and Tom Chapman buttedin to raise the Iowa lead to 6-3. Kuhladded another hook for good measure, |but Fons hit two on charity tosses and Itook a perfect pass from Heinen for Ia set-up score. :Kuhl dribbled the regulation basket- 1hall floor distance to tip in another jshort hook, and Siegal followed withtwo free throws. Fons hooked for two,!and Ray “The Oak” Oakley balancedtwo Iowa charity tosses with a loping,one-handed pot-shot from far outsidethe Hawk defense.Trickey and Kuhl counted for tworapid .scores, and Nelson, under ordersto shoot, kept Chicago in the game,18-14. with another long throw. Oak¬ley and Wagenberg, both hitting fromthe outside, knotted the game at 18-18, and Heinen countered the never-a-miss Iowa free throw brigade with ahook that put Chicago out in the leadfor the last time, 20-19.From then on the lowans played theMaroons close, picked them up faster,and hampered tl^ Maroon long shotattack.Boilermakers WhipMaroons, 64-19The .Maroon cagers opened theirsea.son against a strong Purdue quin¬tet at Lafayette Saturday evening.The final score was 64-19 in favorof the Boilermakers.The Maroons appeared to be al¬most helpless and the game was arout from start to finish. Purdue led30-5 at the halftime.Chuck Wagenburg, who just gainedhi.s eligibility, managed to be theMaroons’ high scorer with a total offive points made by two baskets anda charity toss.Reynolds Club HasBilliard ContestReynolds Club officials yesterdayannounced a Handicap Straight RailHilliard Tournament which is to startTuesday, January 13.Anyone registered in the Universitywill be eligible to compete in thetourney and registrations are now be¬ing taken in the Billiard Room desk.\ ten cents entry fee is charged andattractive prizes will be offered tothe winners.All contestants will have an excel¬lent chance for the prizes since, inaddition to the handicaps to be em¬ployed, both championship and con-i^olation flights will be used.Leading contestants will be TedHell and John Johnson. Bell is nowthe University three-cushion cham¬pion while Johnson holds the straighttail crown.Service—(Continued from page one)There will be 1,000 men in trainingat the University beginning January14, when the first section opens. Theywill be able to continue in school orin their job as this pre-service train-tng is extra-curricular and meets inthe evenings from 7 to 10.Gertrude Erickson, who is manag¬ing the Institute’s First Aid course,reports that 240 women have already'igned up to begin training January14, and urges University women tot^ign up before the registration closes.Registration for the Basic TrainingCourse is at the University Informa¬tion desk and for the First Aid Coursein Harper E 54. 1-M BasketballTourney PlannedIntramural Director Wally Hebertand Frank Lynch are at Resent lay¬ing plans for the annual I.M. basket¬ball struggle. Robert Smith has beenchosen student manager for thetournament and entries are now beingreceived at the office in Bartlett.Plans for the contest are not com¬pletely formulated as yet, accordingto Hebert, but the major differencethis year will be an increase in thenumber of games to be played by eachteam.Creel—(Continued from page one)hers, and two women who have de¬grees from both China and the UnitedStates, are working without compen¬sation and expect to take advantageof a time-reducing system to finishthis work in as short a time as possi¬ble. TUNE INTONITE and EVERY NITESTINEWAYSYMPHONIC HOURPresenting music of famous masters by world-famousorchestras and conductors as interpreted on records10:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.Station WIND 560 K. C.Ask for your free copy of a complete month's musicalprogram schedule at STINEWAY'S — blth and KENWOODSTINEWAY DRUGSCOR. 57th and KENWOOD WE DELIVER—PHONE DOR. 2844. tall man... dead eyeBIG TEN BASKETBALLLa.st night’s scoresIowa 53 Chicago 39Indiana 38 Wisconsin 34Purdue 36 Michigan 18Northwestern 49 Minnesota 38Billiard TourneyIn Third RoundWith the opening of the winterquarter the Intramural BilliardTourney moves into its third round.Sixteen teams remain in the contest.Reynolds Club habitues give the PhiSigma Deltas, who enjoy the uniquedistinction of having three teams leftin the tournament, the nod for thewinner’s points. Leading the Phi Sig“A” team, which is rated heads andshoulders above the rest of the com¬petitors, is Ted Bell, University three-cushion champion.Also rated as strong outfits by thesame authorities are the Pi Lam “A”and “B” teams and the Alpha Deltteam. Others still in the competitionare Sigma Chi, Psi Upsilon “A” and“F”, Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Delt “B”,Deke and the Phi Psi “A” and “C”teams.Metcalf Speaks toTrackmen on WarTomorrow at 4, Athletic Director T.Nelson Metcalf will address thevarsity and freshmen members of theindoor track team on “The Role ofAthletics with Regard to the PresentEmergency.”The meeting will be held in theBartlett Trophy Room. Anyone inter¬ested in track is invited to attend thetalk. This marks the first occasionon which the Athletic Director hasmade any public comment on thewar and athletics.WEEKLY ATHLETICCALENDARThursdaySquash at Hyde Park Y.M.C.A. at 8FridayGymnastics vs. Purdue atBartlett at 8Ice Rink Warming HouseParty by Terraqua at 8SaturdayWrestling vs. Bradley andIllinois Normal awayBasketball vs. Northwesternat 8 TEXT BOOKSUSED and NEWFor University CoursesFOUNTAIN PENS — NOTE BOOKS — SLIDE RULESDRAWING SETS —ZIPPER BAGS — BRIEF CASESS T A T I O N E R Y — LAUNDRYCASES — ALARM-CLOCKSFILING SUPPLIES — UofC JEWELRY — UofC STATIONERYTYPING SUPPLIES ALL KINDSTypewriters-Sold-Rented—ExchangedWOODWORTH'SBOOK1311 E. 57th St.NEAR KIMBARK AVE. STOREOPEN EVENINGSPhone DORCHESTER 48002 Blocks East Mandet HallB "''gPage Six THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 6. 1942-War Hits MidwayFacultyKeyed ForActionThirty University of Chicago fac¬ulty members are on leave of ab¬sence for military service or defensework in various government depart¬ments.Fourteen faculty members are atwork in government agencies in con¬nection with the nation’s war effort.Men who are with the Office ofPrice Administration are: George H.Brown and Joel Dean, of the Schoolof Business faculty; Harold F. Gos-nell, of the Department of PoliticalScience; H. Gregg Lewis and JacobL. Mosak, of the Department of Eco¬nomics.Arthur J. Dempster, professor ofphysics, and Donald J. Hughes, in¬structor in physics, are serving withthe National Defense Research Com¬mittee. IFrederick H. Harbison, assistantprofessor of economics, is workingwith the National Defense MediationBoard.Nathan C. Leites, instructor in po¬litical science, is serving in the De¬partment of Justice.Samuel A. Stouffer, professor ofsociology, is with the Morale Divisionof the Army, under Brigadier Gen¬eral Frederick Osborn.Floyd W. Reeves, professor of ad¬ministration in the University’s De¬partment of Education, is with theDefense Commission of the AmericanYouth Committee of the AmericanCouncil on Education.Thornton Page, instructor in astro¬physics, is now at the Naval OrdnanceLaboratory in Washington.Jacob Viner, Morton D. Hull Dis¬tinguished Service Professor of Eco¬nomics, and for years on call as anadviser to the Treasury Department,is on leave to that Department.Neil H. Jacoby, whose appointmentas Secretary of the University was.recently announced, is completing anational defense research project inNew York City.Of the sixteen members of the fac¬ulty who are in service with thearmed forces, the following are inthe Medical Reserve Corps: Drs. Hen¬ry W. Brosin, Richard C. Boyer,George A. Boylston, Max Costin, Gus¬tave Freeman, Alf T. Haerem, Rich¬ard W. Ashley, Donald Ross, SimonL. Wolters, and Melbourne W. Boyn¬ton.William J. Mather, bursar of theUniversity, is a Major in the OrdnanceDivision, stationed in Chicago.Sigmund Levarie, instructor in mu¬sic, is with the Signal Corps; SelbyM. Skinner, assistant professor ofphysical science, is a Major in theCoast Artillery; Dr. Edward H. Camp,Harry W. Kingham, and William R.Keast are in other capacities in theArmy. 2 MoreStudentsJoin UpRobert O’Donnell and ThaddeusKukula, two former University ofChicago students, are training forjobs in United States armed forces,one in the air corps, and the otherin the Chicago Naval Reserve PublicRelations Office.Robert Patrick O’Donnell, one-timebusiness manager of the Maroon,member of Owl and Serpent, andbusiness manager of the Student Fif¬tieth Anniversary Committee, also at¬tended Notre Dame for two years,where he was a member of the varsityfencing team.O’Donnell, who entered the navy asa yeoman, third class, reported forduty at the Great Lakes Naval Train¬ing Station on November 22. Therehe underwent three weeks of inten¬sive training in the fundamentals ofnaval procedure and seamanship. Hehopes to gain advertising experiencein the Chicago Naval Reserve PublicRelations office, and is planning tocomplete his education by attendingthe University of Chicago College.Thaddeus Jacob Kukula has justcompleted primary flight training atCorpus Christi Naval Air Station. Af¬ter two weeks of the indoctrinationperiod, four weeks in ground school,and nine weeks of primary flighttraining, he is now considered a Navypilot. His training has yet to be fin¬ished with intermediate flight train¬ing, instrument flying, and finallywork in the advanced squadrons. Naval Reserve ChangesEnlistment RegulationsAnswering the Navy’s demand for2,600 pilot-training recruits permonth, two changes in the rules forenlistment in Naval Reserve Aviationwere announced by the Naval Avia-Blackout—(Continued from page one)Schedule “C”Dance Jan. 10 notice, for example, how much morelight the GO signal gives than thered STOP signal. You discover thatif you light a match inside your carit will give enough light to warnother cars. You’d think there wouldbe horns blowing, but there are none.And when you venture to flash yourlights, some angry voice shouts,“TURN ’EM OFF!’’“Put out the lights’’ was the cry.Little groups gathered before lightedshop windows, forgotten neon signs,the glowing clocks which are usuallyso helpful. A little tinkle of breakingglass... lights out.Typically AmericanDarker and darker the city became,a blackout is a gradual process. Itseemed so typically American thatthe last things to go out were thegi'eat billboards. In the dark city theblatant signs stood advising anyraider:“Walk A Mile For A Camel’’“Next Time—Try The Train’’“Best Buy’s Buick’’But the billboards went out too, atlast...nobody was buying.The candles on the bar were thereal thing, this time. We slipped in aside door, found the windows coveredwith heavy canvas, people dancing inthe half dark. There seemed some¬thing somber about the very swishing-clicks of the ice in the bartender’sshaker, there was less laughter, lessmoving around. The orchestra seemed tion Cadet Selection Board at Chicagoby Jan. 3.One change provides for the de-ferrment from active duty of collegesophomores, juniors, and seniors en¬listing in this branch of the NavalReserve until the completion of theircurrent college year. The secondchange provides that applicants forpilot training may receive transporta¬tion from any recruiting substationto the nearest selection board at theNavy’s expense. Applicants will begiven preliminary examinations atthe substation prior to the issuanceof this transportation.Sophomores EligibleUnder the rule affecting college stu¬dents, sophomores in accredited col¬leges may enlist as Naval Aviationcadets provided that they have, “ev¬ery reasonable expectation,’’ of com¬pleting the 2 year college require¬ment for Naval Aviation. Failure tofulfill this requirement after enlist¬ment would result in a transfer tosome other branch of the Naval Re¬serve.Cadets, who must be unmarried andin good health, are required to com¬plete 2 years of college training be¬fore beginning the 10-month trainingcourse. Upon successful completion ofthis course, they are commissioned asEnsigns in the Naval Reserve.Reynolds Club Council’s annual bas¬ketball dances, newly embellishedwith the title of Winter “C” Dances,begin another year following the N.U.game Saturday, Jan. 10. Profits fromthis year’s series of four dances willbe donated to the Red Cross War Re¬lief Fund.Promised by the council is the bestin orchestral entertainment. “We aregoing to keep up the fine string ofbands presented at the “C” dancesduring the past quarter,’’ said spokes¬man Hal Steffe. “And the price for the first dance is only thirty-threecents a person, including tax.’’ to be playing faster, however; 1couldn’t be sure. Anyway, the hostbought the house a round of drinks inview of the auspicious occasion. Wedrank to that.We drank to the war, 1 suppose,and to a blackout that was the realthing. I suppose we drank to an oldworld finally dead and to the begin¬ning of the struggle for the new.When we went out there were search¬lights fingering the sky. The newworld was having a Hollywoodpremier.Alumni Magazine Out TomorrowJapan’s invasion of the Philippines was predicted before the war in aletter from Conrado Beniez published in the Alumni Magazine out tomorrow.British reaction to America’s entry is described by David Daiches in anarticle based on a letter from his brother in England. There is also a storyabout alumni now working for National Defense.An explanation of the Institute of Military Studies and a reprint ofPresident Hutchins’ talk on the war complete the issue. AlumniAttendSurveys'Two of the famous “Chicago Plan’’general courses in the biological andthe social sciences, will be offered toalumni, in special versions, begin¬ning Friday. Announcement of thecourses was made by Paul V. HarperUniversity trustee, and chairman ofthe alumni committee sponsoring theplan.Alumni and their husbands or wivesare eligible for the courses, completewith syllabi and reading lists, whichwill be given on the Midway Quad¬rangles.“Since we started to earn a living,we have learned a great deal that we"never did or could at school or theUniversity,’’ Mr. Harper said. “Butit has been too readily assumed thata good educational program, oncecompleted, was enough to last throughlife. Although once well started, wehaven’t all done very well in contin¬uing our liberal education.’’President Hutchins, in a letter toalumni in the Chicago region, said,“The plan seems to me to be* ex¬cellent, and the degree to which itaccords with the administrative pol¬icy of the University is significant.The University has always held thatits buildings and other resources arenot only for a four-year sojourn onthe Quadrangles but also for the con¬tinuing activities of alumni.’’The biological sciences course, likeits undergraduate counterpart, willinclude lectures by members of thevarious departments in the field. Itwill be heade<l by Dr. Merle Coulter,professor of botany. Lectures in thesocial sciences will be by MaynardC. Krueger, assistant profes.sor ofeconomics, and Joseph D. Lohman. in¬structor in sociology.Lectures in the social sciences willbe: The Nature of Social Problems,January 13; Society, Culture, and So¬cial Control, January 23; Processesof Social Change, February 10;Breakdown of the Medieval Folk So¬ciety, February 24; The Emergenceof the Urban Industrial World, March10; Some Basic Institutional Featuresof the Modern Economic System,March 24; The Working of the MarketProcess—Competition and Monopoly,April 7; The Impact of Industrializa¬tion on Social Institutions, April 21;Social Control and Contemporary So¬cial Disorganization, May 5; Com¬peting Philosophies of Social Or¬ganization, May 19; and The Emer¬gence of International Society, June 2.ASU ConclaveFavors UnitySatisfied with the present positionof the United States in relation to theAxis, the annual national conventionof the American Student Union, meet¬ing in New York City, December 28-30, made “National Unity’’ the key¬note for the three day session. Threehundred delegates listened to suchfamous figures as Sylvia Sydney de¬clare that no petty quarrels, and noappeasing factions must be allowedto thwart the united efforts of a na¬tion at war.The conclave gave the local chap¬ters of the ASU almost completeautonomy in deciding their programsand tactics for 1942. Having achievedtheir collective aim of intervention,a program inaugurated in the sum¬mer of 1941, the national executivecouncil of the Union strongly advisedthe local chapters to join other activelocal groups.CLASSIFIEDAttention Married Students. For Rent—Two-room furn. apt. Cooking facilities and elec,refr. Well-heated, sunny, clean, well-decor.Available now at $35. 6023 Kenwood. But¬terfield 9424.Girl—room, board & pin money in exchange ■for light services. Near campus. Callafter 6 P.M. Hyde Park 5004.Girl—private room, bath and board in ex¬change for light household duties. Closeto campus. Phone Midway 6225. OKS FOR ALLCOURSESNEW and SECOND-HANDAlso General Books-Rental Library SetsTypewritersSoldRentedExchangedPostal Station Stationery Supplies - NotebooksPencil Pads - Fountain PensTheme Paper - File BoxesDesk BlottersLocksAthletic GoodsKodak - Films - ServiceU.of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue